4.6 Article

Exercise and ageing impact the kynurenine/tryptophan pathway and acylcarnitine metabolite pools in skeletal muscle of older adults

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY-LONDON
Volume 601, Issue 11, Pages 2165-2188

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1113/JP284142

Keywords

ageing; ketones; kynurenic acid; NAD(+)

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Age and physical activity have different effects on muscle metabolites, with higher levels of kynurenine metabolites in older adults' muscles and higher levels of kynurenic acid and NAD(+) metabolites in active adults' muscles, which are associated with cardiorespiratory fitness and muscle oxidative capacity. Additionally, elevated levels of acylcarnitines in muscles of physically active individuals may indicate impaired metabolic health. Surprisingly, acute endurance exercise induces similar changes in whole-body substrate utilization, muscle acylcarnitines, and ketone bodies, regardless of activity levels.
Exercise-induced perturbation of skeletal muscle metabolites is a probable mediator of long-term health benefits in older adults. Although specific metabolites have been identified to be impacted by age, physical activity and exercise, the depth of coverage of the muscle metabolome is still limited. Here, we investigated resting and exercise-induced metabolite distribution in muscle from well-phenotyped older adults who were active or sedentary, and a group of active young adults. Percutaneous biopsies of the vastus lateralis were obtained before, immediately after and 3 h following a bout of endurance cycling. Metabolite profile in muscle biopsies was determined by tandem mass spectrometry. Mitochondrial energetics in permeabilized fibre bundles was assessed by high resolution respirometry and fibre type proportion was assessed by immunohistology. We found that metabolites of the kynurenine/tryptophan pathway were impacted by age and activity. Specifically, kynurenine was elevated in muscle from older adults, whereas downstream metabolites of kynurenine (kynurenic acid and NAD(+)) were elevated in muscle from active adults and associated with cardiorespiratory fitness and muscle oxidative capacity. Acylcarnitines, a potential marker of impaired metabolic health, were elevated in muscle from physically active participants. Surprisingly, despite baseline group difference, acute exercise-induced alterations in whole-body substrate utilization, as well as muscle acylcarnitines and ketone bodies, were remarkably similar between groups. Our data identified novel muscle metabolite signatures that associate with the healthy ageing phenotype provoked by physical activity and reveal that the metabolic responsiveness of muscle to acute endurance exercise is retained [NB]:AUTHOR: Please ensure that the appropriate material has been provide for Table S2, as well as for Figures S1 to S7, as also cited in the text with age regardless of activity levels.

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